Fukushima Nuclear Plant Contaminated Water Release Raises Concerns

Unveiling the Facts Ahead of Contaminated Water Discharge In an alarming decision, Japan has announced plans to release treated, but still radioactive, water from the melted-down Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean. The water, estimated to be over one million tons, equivalent to filling 500 Olympic-sized swimming pools, was used for cooling the reactors after the 2011 tsunami disaster. Mikamura Ai, clad in a white gown and gloves, was seen cutting fish samples at the Tarachine Research Institute, located about an hour's drive from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on the eastern coast of Japan. Mikamura, along with other volunteers, collects fish samples from the ocean around the nuclear plant four times a year. Since the establishment of the research institute in the aftermath of the tsunami and subsequent nuclear disaster, they have diligently continued this work. Mikamura is not a scientist, just as the non-profit institute named "Tarachine," meaning "m...